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Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Low-Tech Holiday Gifts

Low-Tech Holiday Gifts the
Grandkids Will Remember

Instead of Another Mobile Device or Video Game, Consider
Something Lasting from the Heart

Kids get their first cell phone by age 12, and more than a
third of them have smart phones. Nine out of 10 teens have a computer and 97
percent of 12- to 17-year-olds play video games. More than half the homes in the
United States have a fairly new video game console.

“It’s great that our kids have access to technology, but I
talk to a lot of grandparents who say they simply don’t enjoy giving their
grandkids tech gifts during the holiday season,” says Ted Bernstein. “They
want to give something their grandkids will treasure; something they’ll remember
for a long time.”

That has become more challenging as kids, along with the
rest of us, come to rely more and more on technology for everything -- from
communication to entertainment to telling the time.

Coming from a four-generation family of life insurance
specialists, Bernstein has a special interest in family legacies and a long
history of innovation. He offers these suggestions for holiday gifts for
grandkids that create lasting memories.

• Their own clunker – which you’ll restore
together. If you have a grandchild who’s still a few years from
driving age, buy an old pickup truck that the two of you can restore together.
You’ll have years to complete the project, which guarantees not only lots of
one-on-one time together, but also the opportunity to teach valuable skills
that will benefit him or her for a lifetime. “Plan it right, and when your
grandchild gets a driver’s license, he or she will also have wheels,”
Bernstein says. “And after spending so much time working on that vehicle,
they’re more likely to drive it carefully!”

• An annual helping hand for years after
you’ve gone. Imagine being able to send your grandchild a holiday
gift of $20,000 every year for 20, 30 or 40 years – with a note from you
attached. You can do it with the Installment Life Option, a life insurance
policy option that pays beneficiaries of a life insurance policy in
predetermined amounts of your choice for up to 40 years. Because of the
deferred payout, the insurance company can reduce the premiums up to 50
percent. And your grandchild is reminded of your love for him or her
throughout his life, particularly during the financially stressful milestones:
college tuition, wedding, paying off student loans, down payment for first
home, and first child.

“A lot of the grandparents who do this love the fact that
they can continue to help their grandchild long after they’re gone,” Bernstein
says. “They also like the fact that they can choose what date the money is
disbursed, whether it’s a holiday, a birthday, or a special date significant
to the grandparents and grandchild. And they can add a personal note, which
can be sent according to the policy holder’s instructions.”

• The gift of compassion. Sponsor an
impoverished child in another country in your grandchild’s name. “I like the
organizations that allow you to personally connect with the child you sponsor,
so your grandchild can write to and receive letters from them, and trade
photographs. You can learn about the country together, and pick out gifts for
birthday or holiday season,” Bernstein says. A grandparent might pay the whole
cost of sponsorship or allow the grandchild to pick up a small portion, he
adds.

One organization highly rated by independent charity
evaluator Charity Navigator is Compassion International. The 61-year-old
Christian-based non-profit facilitates 1.2 million sponsorships, providing the
children with food, medical care, educational opportunities and more for $38
per month. Sponsors are invited to exchange letters and develop a relationship
with the child.

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About Ted
Bernstein

Ted Bernstein is a third-generation life insurance
specialist with decades of speaking out and advocating for changes on behalf of
consumers. He was the first to introduce “no-load” life insurance in the
mid-1980s and recently developed the Installment Life Option. Bernstein is a
nationally recognized expert in alternative distribution strategies and life
insurance product development.